Description
This new volume in the Frick Diptych series features an illuminating essay by former deputy director and Peter Jay Sharp Chief Curator Xavier F. Salomon paired with images of a new work created for the occasion by Flora Yukhnovich, along with a short text by the artist.
François Boucher (1703ー1770) made the four paintings known as the Four Seasons in 1755 for Madame De Pompadour, King Louis XV’s long-term official mistress. Their original location is unknown, but their unusual shape suggests that they were used as overdoors, no doubt in one of Pompadour’s many properties in France. In place of the labours that traditionally illustrate the theme of the four seasons, Boucher depicts delightful amorous encounters in joyous colours. This combination of luxury and seduction—all treated in a fanciful, even humorous manner—is typical of Boucher.
Accompanying the Boucher paintings are images of Flora Yuknovich’s contribution, an extraordinary cycle of paintings inspired by Boucher’s Four Seasons, to be displayed at the Frick, in a space on the first floor, occupied between 1935 and 2020 by the Boucher Room.
Author biographies
Xavier F. Salomon is director of the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum and the former deputy director and Peter Jay Sharp Chief Curator of The Frick Collection.
Flora Yukhnovich is a London-based artist, best known for her contemporary interpretation of the Rococo style.
Table of Contents
- Director’s Foreword
- Acknowledgments 8
- Contributions by Flora Yukhnovich
- Boucher’s Four Seasons by Xavier F. Salomon
- Bibliography
- Index
- Image Credits






